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Diet and trophic niches of sympatric Seriola species revealed by stomach content and multi-tissue stable isotope analyses
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Diet and trophic niches of sympatric Seriola species revealed by stomach content and multi-tissue stable isotope analyses

Xu Wei, Yan Wang, James R. Tweedley, Neil R. Loneragan, Tao Tian, Zhilin Wang, Yanchao Zhang, Wencong An, Longfei Xu and Zhongxin Wu
Fisheries research, Vol.282, 107272
2025

Abstract

Dietary composition Isotopic niche Niche overlap Recreational fishing Seriola lalandi Seriola quinqueradidata
Amberjacks in the family Carangidae are large, carnivorous pelagic fish that are highly targeted by fisheries globally. Seriola lalandi and Seriola quinqueradidata co-occur seasonally in the northern Yellow Sea and are caught by recreational fishers. This study used stomach content analysis (SCA) and stable isotope analysis (SIA) of δ13C and δ15N from liver and muscle tissues to investigate the dietary composition (including ontogenetic shifts), trophic niche breadth and overlap of these two species. This combination of techniques provides information on immediate diet (SCA), and short-term (~3 months, liver SIA) and longer-term (~5-6 months, muscle SIA) trophic assimilation. Both Seriola species were carnivorous, mainly feeding on fish, particularly the anchovy Engraulis japonicus, as well as crustaceans and cephalopods. Their diet shifts to larger-sized fish prey (e.g. mackerel Scomber japonicus) with ontogeny. Differences in δ13C values of liver and muscle were detected for both species, and for δ15N values for S. lalandi. Interspecific differences in δ15N and δ13C values for muscle and δ15N for liver were detected but no differences in δ13C values for liver tissue. δ15N values for liver and muscle were correlated with fork length in both species, suggesting a shift to higher-trophic level prey with ontogeny. Seriola lalandi had a broader trophic niche than S. quinqueradidata, indicating that the former species had a higher trophic diversity. Isotopic niche overlap between species were greater for the shorter-term liver (0.81) than longer-term muscle (0.39), which might reflect different overwintering habitats for the species or temporal-spatially partitioning in their pelagic habitat use during their reproductive migration. The study facilitated a better understanding of the trophic dynamics of sympatric Seriola species and provides information for implementing ecosystem-based fisheries management for these highly targeted species.

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
8 Earth Sciences
8.93 Archaeology
8.93.1193 Stable Isotopes
Web Of Science research areas
Fisheries
ESI research areas
Plant & Animal Science
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